Corporate Advocacy Program: The best way to manage and repair your business reputation. Hiding negative complaints is only a Band-Aid. Consumers want to see how businesses take care of business. All businesses will get complaints. How those businesses take care of those complaints is what separates good businesses from bad businesses.

Priceline.com is in the practice of ripping off consumers. On the final page of your bid for travel services, they do not list the dates. Therefore, you must be positive your dates are correct. And, if they are not, or if their website changed the dates (which I watched it do), you are stuck with worthless travel services.

Priceline.com does not believe in customer service and absolutely refuses to acknowledge its ongoing problems, which are enormous. A simple google of "priceline rip off" yields millions of hits.

Priceline.com does not offer relief in their contract. You can sue. However, my creditor offers arbitration, at the expense of the creditor. I simply have added Priceline as co respondent to force the issue and to which they must hire attorneys and fight my claim against them.

Simply read your credit card contract and most likely it will have an arbitration clause, whereby Priceline pays all its own expenses.

Also see the arbitration forum www.jamsadr.com, which I feel is the best, since it is the most expensive to Priceline and most fair to consumers.

Without an arbitration agreement, we can form a class against Priceline.com.

Corporate Advocacy Program: The best way to manage and repair your business reputation. Hiding negative complaints is only a Band-Aid. Consumers want to see how businesses take care of business. All businesses will get complaints. How those businesses take care of those complaints is what separates good businesses from bad businesses.